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Modeling noisy quantum circuits using experimental characterization

Megan Dahlhauser, Travis S. Humble

2021Physical review. A/Physical review, A37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices offer unique platforms to test and evaluate the behavior of quantum computing. However, validating circuits on NISQ devices is difficult due to fluctuations in the underlying noise sources and other nonreproducible behaviors that generate computational errors. Here we present a test-driven approach that decomposes a noisy, application-specific circuit into a series of bootstrapped experiments on a NISQ device. By characterizing individual subcircuits, we generate a composite noise model for the original quantum circuit. We demonstrate this approach to model applications of Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger(GHZ)-state preparation and the Bernstein-Vazirani algorithm on a family of superconducting transmon devices. We measure the model accuracy using the total variation distance between predicted and experimental results, and we demonstrate that the composite model works well across multiple circuit instances. Our approach is shown to be computationally efficient and offers a trade-off in model complexity that can be tailored to the desired predictive accuracy.

Topics & Concepts

TransmonComputer scienceQuantum computerNoise (video)Quantum circuitAlgorithmElectronic circuitMeasure (data warehouse)QuantumComputer engineeringTheoretical computer scienceQuantum error correctionArtificial intelligenceData miningElectrical engineeringEngineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsImage (mathematics)Quantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum many-body systems
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